Author:
SCHLEIZER ANTHONY D.,BONNECAZE ROGER T.
Abstract
The dynamic behaviour and stability of a two-dimensional immiscible
droplet subject
to shear or pressure-driven flow between parallel plates is studied under
conditions of
negligible inertial and gravitational forces. The droplet is attached to
the lower plate
and forms two contact lines that are either fixed or mobile. The boundary-integral
method is used to numerically determine the flow along and dynamics of
the free
surface. For surfactant-free interfaces with fixed contact lines, the deformation
of the
interface is determined for a range of capillary numbers, droplet to displacing
fluid
viscosity ratios, droplet sizes and flow type. It is shown that as the
capillary number
or viscosity ratio or size of the droplet increases, the deformation of
the interface
increases and above critical values of the capillary number no steady shape
exists.
For small droplets, and at low capillary numbers, shear and pressure-driven
flows
are shown to yield similar steady droplet shapes. The effect of surfactants
is studied
assuming a fixed amount of surfactant that is subject to convective–diffusive
transport
along the interface and no transport to or from the bulk fluids. Increasing
the surface
Péclet number, the ratio of convective to diffusive transport, leads
to an accumulation
of surfactant at the downstream end of the droplet and creates Marangoni
stresses
that immobilize the interface and reduce deformation. The no-slip boundary
condition
is then relaxed and an integral form of the Navier-slip model is used to
examine the
effects of allowing the droplet to slip along the solid surface in a pressure-driven
flow. For contact angles less than or equal to 90°, a stable droplet
spreads along the
wall until a steady shape is reached, when the droplet translates across
the wall at a
constant velocity. The critical capillary number is larger for these droplets
compared
to those with pinned contact lines. For contact angles greater than 90°,
the wetted
area between a stable droplet and the wall decreases until a steady shape
is reached.
The critical capillary number for these droplets is less than that for
pinned droplets.
Above the critical capillary number the droplet completely detaches for
a contact
angle of 120°, or part of it is pinched off leaving behind a smaller
attached droplet
for contact angles less than or equal to 90°.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
108 articles.
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